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Someone on another board I read posted a description of how to
construct a self-resonant, helically-wound vertical as an emergency replacement for a 1/4-wave monopole for a MW broadcast station. His conclusion was that its radiation resistance would be somewhere around 40 ohms, and could be driven at least at reduced power by a tx expecting a 50 ohm load. I responded as below, and thought it might be a topic for discussion on rraa. ________ Such a configuration may be self-resonant, but that does not mean that it has the same radiation resistance as that of a linear monopole at its 1st self-resonance (1/4-lambda). According to John Kraus in "Antennas," 3rd edition, Chapter 8-22 -- the radiation resistance of such a helical antenna is approximately the same as that of a linear monopole of the same overall height, and not to the length of the wire used to wind the helix. The radiation resistance of a short monopole is approximately (h^2)/ 312, where h = height in electrical degrees. A 20-ft monopole is about 12-1/2 degrees at 1700 kHz, so the highest radiation resistance possible for your configuration for MW broadcast use is about half an ohm. Kraus says in this chapter "The advantage of the helix over a straight wire or stub is that its inductance can resonate the antenna." This means that a separate "loading coil" is not needed, which can reduce the fixed resistive losses in the antenna system. But it doesn't mean that a self-resonant, normal-mode helix has the radiation resistance and radiation system efficiency of a linear, 1/4-wave monopole (other things equal). RF |
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